Citizens Nat. Bank of Paris, Ill. v. Calvert

527 S.W.2d 175, 18 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 430, 1975 Tex. LEXIS 247
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1975
DocketB-4964
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 527 S.W.2d 175 (Citizens Nat. Bank of Paris, Ill. v. Calvert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Nat. Bank of Paris, Ill. v. Calvert, 527 S.W.2d 175, 18 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 430, 1975 Tex. LEXIS 247 (Tex. 1975).

Opinion

SAM D. JOHNSON, Justice.

Ethel Burnsides, a resident of the State of Illinois, died testate devising part of her estate, consisting of the mineral estate on a tract of land located in Texas, to designated charities in Illinois. The Citizens National Bank of Paris, Illinois, the executor of the estate of Ethel Burnsides, and Raymond Massey, ancillary executor in Texas (hereinafter referred to as the executors), brought this lawsuit against the Comptroller of Public Accounts, the State Treasurer and the Attorney General of Texas (hereinafter referred to collectively as the Comptroller) to recover inheritance taxes and interest in the sum of $20,748.35 paid under protest to the State of Texas in May of 1972. The cause was submitted to the trial, court, sitting without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts, supplemented by testimony on behalf of the Comptroller. The trial court rendered judgment for the Comptroller that the executors take nothing. The court of civil appeals affirmed. 515 S.W.2d 142. We reverse the judgments of the courts below and render judgment for the executors.

Texas inheritance tax statutes include both a “Basic Inheritance Tax,” Articles 14.01, 1 et seq., and an “Additional Inheritance and Transfer Tax,” sometimes referred to as a “pick up” inheritance tax, Article 14.12. Article 14.12 was passed “to take full advantage of the eighty per cent (80%) credit allowed by the Federal Revenue Act of 1926.” Article 14.12(E). If the “basic” inheritance tax imposed by Articles 14.01, et seq., does not exhaust the allowable federal offset or credit, Article 14.12 imposes an additional pick up tax in order *177 to insure that the full amount of the offset or credit allowed by the federal statute is obtained.

Article 14.12(A) imposes the additional pick up tax:

“(A) Impose Additional Tax. In addition to the inheritance tax already levied by this State under existing laws, an inheritance and transfer tax is hereby levied upon the net estate of every decedent dying after this Act shall take effect, and whose estate, or any portion thereof, is, or hereafter shall be, made taxable under the inheritance tax laws of this State, or that may be subject to such taxes under any law of this State that may be hereinafter enacted. Said tax shall be, and is, levied upon the entire net value of the taxable estate of the decedent situated and taxable in the State of Texas, and the tax on each such estate shall be equal to the difference between the sum of such taxes due this State as inheritance or transfer taxes and eighty per cent (80%) of the total sum of the estate and transfer taxes imposed on such estate by the United States Government under the Revenue Act of 1926, by reason of the property of such estate which is situated in this State and taxable under the laws of this State.”

Article 14.12(D) details the method by which this tax is to be computed:

“(D) Computation of Tax. In determining what is eighty per cent (80%) of the United States estate tax mentioned in the preceding Sections, the same shall be computed as eighty per cent (80%) of such taxes actually assessed and determined by the Federal Government under the Revenue Act of 1926, against every estate situated wholly in this State, or in case an estate is situated partly in this State and partly outside of this State, then such eighty per cent (80%) shall be computed as eighty per cent (80%) of the total amount of the Federal taxes finally determined and assessed by the Federal government under the Revenue Act of 1926, on and against that part of the estate situated in the State of Texas, and said amount of Federal tax shall be determined by multiplying the total Federal estate tax on the entire estate by a percentage which shall be the same percentage as the percentage of the net estate located in Texas is to the total net estate of the decedent, wherever located, before deducting specific exemptions.”

Ethel Burnsides left a large estate in Illinois and a single Texas asset — a tract of land in Gregg County. The surface estate of the Texas tract was devised to nonchari-table devisees and was stipulated to be worth, for tax purposes, $19,957.50. The mineral estate, which was devised to charities located in Illinois was stipulated to be worth, for tax purposes, $584,579. The basic tax on the surface estate was computed to be $638.50 and is not at issue in this appeal. There was no basic tax imposed on the mineral estate because it was devised to charitable beneficiaries. See Article 14.-015(2). The allowable credit for state death taxes under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, Section 2011, has been computed to be $85,738.59, also a figure which is not in dispute. The sole question involved in this case regards the computation of the amount of the pick up tax imposed by Article 14.12.

The Comptroller asserts that in computing the pick up tax one should first ascertain the percentage which the gross estate in Texas ($604,536.50) bears to the gross estate wherever located ($2,745,-821.62), which is 22.0166 percent. Then the net taxable estate wherever located should be determined by subtracting the total deductions allowed by federal authorities from the gross estate wherever located. Next, 22.0166 percent of the total deductions allowed by federal law should be subtracted from the gross estate within Texas to arrive at a net taxable estate in Texas of $392,945.85. Thus ascertained, the net taxable estate in Texas amounts to 22.0166 percent of the net taxable estate wherever located ($1,807,480.44). Applying this percentage to the total allowable federal credit *178 for state death taxes ($85,738.59), the Comptroller arrives at an additional tax of $18,876.72. From this amount the basic inheritance tax previously paid, in the amount of $638.50, must be subtracted, with the resulting tax in question computed to be $18,238.52 plus $2,510.13 interest. 2

Notwithstanding the circuitous calculation the Comptroller now advances, the agreed statement of facts reveals the Comptroller used an abbreviated method to compute the pick up tax in the instant case:

“The Defendant Calvert, in fixing the amount of the Article 14.12 tax due, subtracted the $638.50 of basic inheritance tax from the sum of $18,876.72, which the Comptroller determined to be ‘the Pro-Rata Share of Federal Credit for State Death Tax due the State of Texas.’ The Comptroller calculated the $18,876.72 by multiplying $85,738.59 (total credit) by a fraction of which the numerator was $604,536.50 (gross estate within Texas), and the denominator was $2,745,821.62 (gross estate everywhere).”

The Comptroller concedes both of his methods of calculation yield the same figures because they are both based on a gross estate to gross estate ratio. However, he contends the computation of the pick up tax using a percentage determined by calculating the ratio of gross estate in Texas to gross estate everywhere complies with Article 14.12(D).

*179

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Bluebook (online)
527 S.W.2d 175, 18 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 430, 1975 Tex. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-nat-bank-of-paris-ill-v-calvert-tex-1975.